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On 1 September 1939, German guns opened fire on a small Polish garrison at Westerplatte. Within weeks, Poland lay crushed between two totalitarian powers-and the world had crossed the threshold into a new kind of war.
When Eagles Fall: The 1939 Campaign That Changed the World tells the story of September 1939 not as a brief prelude to World War II, but as a decisive turning point in its own right: a brutal laboratory in which blitzkrieg, terror bombing, and the collapse of collective security were all tested and proven.
Historian and narrative storyteller Ivo Vichev takes the reader from the first shells crashing into Westerplatte and the desperate cavalry counter-attacks near Krojanty, through the Bzura counter-offensive and the siege of Warsaw, to cabinet rooms in London and Paris, the Kremlin in Moscow, and uneasy debates in Washington and Tokyo.
On every front, the same questions emerge:
Drawing on diaries, intelligence reports, diplomatic correspondence and post-war testimony, When Eagles Fall restores Polish soldiers, civilians and statesmen to the centre of the story. It shows how their decisions, sacrifices and defeats shaped the war that followed-and why the lessons of 1939 still matter in an age of renewed aggression, territorial revisionism, and contempt for international law.
This book is for readers who enjoy:
In a campaign that lasted only weeks, the world learned how quickly a modern state could be destroyed-and how slowly democracies responded when faced with ruthless, well-prepared aggression.
When Eagles Fall is a powerful reminder that the first campaign of the Second World War was also one of its most important-and that its warnings have never been more relevant.